New Books in History

Maud Anne Bracke, "Reproductive Rights in Modern France: Reproductive Rights in Modern France: Feminism, Contraception, and Abortion, 1950-1980 (Oxford UP, 2025)

Mar 9, 2026
Maud Bracke, Professor of Modern European History who studies European feminisms and reproductive rights. She traces how reproductive liberty and responsibilisation shaped French law and public debate in the 1960s-70s. She explores stratified reproduction, contraception and abortion laws, racialized policies in overseas departments, disability and Black feminist interventions, and tensions in feminist movements.
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ADVICE

Use Intersectional Transnational Methods In Reproductive History

  • Historical research on reproductive rights should adopt intersectional and transnational frameworks.
  • Maud Bracke built a global network and used archives (Les Archives du Féminisme, Bibliothèque Marguerite Durand) to situate French debates within wider patterns.
INSIGHT

Reproductive Citizenship Tied Rights To Responsibility

  • Reproductive citizenship combined rights with obligations rather than granting unfettered freedom to women.
  • Maud Bracke shows 1960s–70s French laws tied contraception and abortion access to a notion of responsibility serving family and nation, limiting who qualified as a reproductive citizen.
INSIGHT

Pronatalism Concealed Stratified Antinatalism

  • Postwar pronatalism in France was stratified and included strands of antinatalism aimed at particular social groups.
  • Bracke links INED demographers and neo-eugenic thinking to debates that framed working-class and racialized fertility as a problem needing control.
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